„Single movement is a movement that quits the relationship with the other movements in order not to become a sequence. Single movement wishes to be
all by itself. Whether that really does work is a dilemma and depends on the personality of a single movement.“

Jan Willem Dreier

„It’s actually hard to tell, what a single movement means to me, because I guess we are used to perceive reality rather as a sequence, than as a
single frame. But then, a Close-Up in Cinema could tell us more about life than the most complex situation or process, a gesture in its symbolic power could subsume a whole speech or a demand.
Maybe, a single movement is more directly linked to our emotional and intuitiv perception. A single movement is the exception, unnoticed or protruding, profane or boiled to the essence, to the
heart of something.“

Lorena Justribó Manion

„One single movement begins with a thought that leads to a change of the position in space of one or more body parts over a period of time. It is a
change in bodily position that comes from an intention to express something and ends when that expression has been transmitted.“

„I am fading into the backdrop of my own awareness trying to recognize where

A what

starts and ends

Expecting for

A thing

which matters to happen,

I am actually disappointed.

I anyway allow myself to unfold some strategies which are no more and no less than being used to produce

A result

Yet becoming a little imprudent I wait a bit longer than usual and come across

A single one.“

Jonas Maria Droste

„A single movement reveals itself to me exclusively in retrospect. It marks a moment in which an impulse or intention doesn't precede a movement but
actually renders as the repercussion of the latter. Thus it demands for a specific way of listening both in a physical and mental dimension.“

Cristina Todorova

„A single movement is a part of an action, that does not define the action, yet.“

„The notion of a single movement is an amalgam: a state of fluidity, stagnation and the in-between. On the one hand, a single movement is limited to
a point of transmission between specific increments of motion in space (fluidity) and the pause (stagnation). Much like a crescendo growing to approach or accentuate the silence following, it
results with a resonance of its parts, namely, that which is found in-between; on the other hand, there is a monotony that occurs through an attempt to limit or resist the bodies urge to stick
and identify with a movement as solely singular in a practice that normally seems composed of multiple steps and components.“